Yes, if you take that perspective, you are absolutely right, but that perspective is based on laws created by man - property is something that belongs to one regardless of law (through a purchase, inheritance, gift or transformation of matter) - under that lens, bitcoin can never be property. But it also does not need to, what is important, is that you can control it and are not dependent on the law. Which is actually what is meant when people describe bitcoin as property. Maybe this article of mine is of interest to you: https://europeanbitcoiners.com/self-sovereignty-and-liberty-in-the-digital-age/

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I see what you mean, that a bitcoin is fundamentally part of the Bitcoin network irrespective of laws. For human purposes though, shouldn’t we discuss it in terms of property and ownership? For society to adopt it we need it to fit into language.